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SPJ’s 2010 Best All-Around Non-Daily Student Newspaper
Volume 97, Number 55
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
www.marquettetribune.org
MU hungry for change Hunger Clean-Up brings 1,400 students into MKE community
Changes to THEO 1001 a step toward diversity By Kelly Meyerhofer and Emily Wright
By Emily Wright
emily.a.wright@marquette.edu
Special to the Tribune, emily.a.wright@marquette.edu
Marquette students helped raise $20,000 for community agencies on Saturday at Hunger Clean-Up, the university’s biggest single day of service of the year. About 1,400 members of the Marquette community volunteered for the annual event to serve the less fortunate in the greater Milwaukee area. Since it began 24 years ago, Hunger Clean-Up has raised nearly $450,000 for more than 50 local Milwaukee agencies, making it “one of the most successful events of its kind in the nation,” according to a Marquette press release. Brittany White, co-coordinator of the event and a sophomore in the College of Arts & Sciences, said Hunger Clean-Up allows students to experience active engagement in the community. She said reflections the student groups on the day have been positive so far. “(Hunger Clean-Up) was absolutely a success,” she said. “Finally seeing it become real was amazing.”
After a research process that included self-study and reflections from past and current teaching assistants, the theology department change eature will that the mandatory tory Theology 1001 course, housed within the College of Arts & Sciences. It will be restructured next semester to include several professors and religious denominations. The new sections of Theology 1001 will be team-taught and are intended to introduce students to multiple perspectives on theological reflection. Each teaching team will include Christians from various churches, one or more scholars from other religious traditions, laymen, women and a Jesuit. This interdisciplinary approach is “one of several options that the theology department will be introducing to improve the pedagogical effectiveness of THEO 1001,” said Robert Masson, one of the theology professors who
See Hunger, page 7
F S
Photo by Xidan Zhang/xidan.zhang@marquette.edu
Andrew Valiquette, Volunteer Committee co-chair, hands flowers to Kelly Knox, coordinator for community service programs during Hunger Clean-Up, the university’s single biggest day of service of the year.
See Religion, page 4
Student hit by car released from hospital Friday
A Marquette junior was hit by a car outside Caffrey’s Pub on 16th Street.
A Marquette junior was hit by a car shortly after midnight Thursday night outside Caffrey’s Pub. The student, whose name is not being released out of consideration for her family, was taken to Froedtert Hospital and has since been released, university spokesman Brian Dorrington said Friday morning. Students at the scene said the victim was running across the street
after leaving the bar when she student lying on the street after the was struck by a black sedan going accident occurred. north on 16th Street. “People on my floor were freakStudents also ing out,” Thelen said she was consaid. “She was scious and responon the ground sive to questions just laying, and it by paramedics bedidn’t look good.” fore being loaded Thelen said it into an ambulance was difficult to on a stretcher. watch the student DPS Lt. Mark being moved Cleveland said to the ambulance. Friday morning “There were that an investigamobs of people tion is ongoing. He on both sides of declined further the street,” Thelen Maggie Thelen, freshman, said. “An ambucomment. College of Communication lance and a fire Maggie Thelen, a freshman truck were on the in the College of Communica- side of the streets. People were tion who lives in McCormick just walking around crying.” Hall, said she looked out her winAndrew Phillips contributed dow and was startled to see the reporting.
INDEX
NEWS
VIEWPOINTS
SPORTS
Bone marrow
Goodman
Trebby
Victim was leaving Caffrey’s Pub when struck by vehicle By Nick Biggi and Matt Mueller
nicholas.biggi@marquette.edu, matthew.mueller@marquette.edu
Photo by Andrew Phillips/andrew.phillips@marquette.edu
DPS REPORTS.....................2 CALENDAR.......................2 CLASSIFIEDS.....................6
VIEWPOINTS......................10 SPORTS..........................12
One hundred MU students are potential marrow donors. PAGE 8
There were mobs of people on both sides of the street ... An ambulance and a fire truck were on the side of the streets.”
Incidents like the Boston bombing intend to incite fear. PAGE 11
Sports provide ultimate distractions from harrowing tragedies. PAGE 13